01-29-2008
And so, what was the difference?
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators
Just a quick message to say great work to Neo and any others who have helped with the upgrade - the layout, appearance and functionality of this forum ROCKS.
By far the best I have seen.
Excellent! (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: alwayslearningunix
1 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
how can i do that in a script withough havin the script halt at the section where the top command is located. am writign a script that will send me the out put of unx commands if the load average of a machine goes beyond the recommended number.
top -n 20
i want to save this output to a file... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: TRUEST
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3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I've got some CPU bottleneck on a HP-UX 11 server : i didn't
understand it until i discover i've got an unusual high percentage
of NICE% CPU regarding my DBRMS process (Sybase 12.x).
How do i have to understand it and how to resolve it ?
Thx. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: eliador2001
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4. Programming
Hi I want to implement the nice command in the shell that I am building. I came to know that there is a corresponding nice() system call for the same. But since I will be forking different processes to run different commands typed on the command prompt, is there any way I can make a command... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: tejbuch
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5. AIX
Is there a 'top' command equivalent in AIX 4.2 ?
I already checked and I do not see the following ones anywhere:
top
nmon
topas (1 Reply)
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6. AIX
Okay, I am trying to come up with a multi-platform script to report top ten CPU and memory hog processes, which will be run by our enterprise monitoring application as an auto-action item when the CPU and Memory utilization gets reported as higher than a certain threshold
I use top on other... (5 Replies)
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7. HP-UX
Running 2 VM Guests on an HPUX Integrity Server. One Guest runs great, the other is always at a high NICE value and 0% idle as shown in TOP:
What do you think should be tuned to bring down the NICE and increase IDLE %? Thanks in advance
-hpuxadmin
slow VM GUEST
Load averages: 2.56,... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: hpuxadmin
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8. AIX
hello ,
We would like to increase the priority of the oracle process . Process(240001 ) should get the priority like the process(240103 ). Am not sure what value i should mention in the renice command(aix 6.1). Please assist me.
240001 A oracle 26804312 1 0 60 20... (2 Replies)
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9. BSD
Hello Folks,
Recently our FreeBSD 7.1 i386 system became very sluggish.
Nothing much is happening over there & whatever is running takes eternity to complete.
All the troubleshooting hinted towards a very high nice percentage.
Can that be the culprit?
Pasting snippets of top command,... (7 Replies)
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10. What is on Your Mind?
Hello All,
Just went through a nice YT video of A.I
Age of A.I YT video
See who is the host of this video :) if you are a Hollywood fan(a bit spoiler)
I hope to learn something of it someday, technology is really growing day by day, cheers.
Thanks,
R. Singh (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: RavinderSingh13
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fdim(3M) fdim(3M)
NAME
fdim(), fdimf(), fdiml(), fdimw(), fdimq() - positive difference functions
SYNOPSIS
HP Integrity Server Only
DESCRIPTION
The function determines the positive difference between its arguments.
Integrity Server Only
is a version of it takes arguments and returns a result.
is a version of it takes arguments and returns a result.
is an version of it takes arguments and returns an result.
is equivalent to on HP-UX systems.
USAGE
To use this function, compile either with the default option or with the and options. To use (for Integrity servers) or compile with the
option. Make sure your program includes Link in the math library by specifying on the compiler or linker command line.
RETURN VALUE
The function returns the positive difference between x and y.
If x y, returns x y (and raises any exceptions resulting from the subtraction).
If x y, returns +zero.
If x or y is NaN, returns NaN.
If both arguments are NaNs, returns NaN.
returns a positively signed infinity in lieu of a value whose magnitude is too large, and raises the overflow and inexact exceptions.
ERRORS
No errors are defined.
SEE ALSO
fdim(3M), fmin(3M), math(5).
STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
: ISO/IEC C99 (including Annex F, ``IEC 60559 floating-point arithmetic'')
fdim(3M)